Top 10 gadgets for your backpack or man-purse

Locutus

Adorable Deplorable
Jun 18, 2007
32,230
47
48
66




10. Cable Shorteners



9. A Space-Saving Wallet


8. A Thumb Drive for Your Key Chain


7. Touch Screen-Friendly Gloves


6. Mini USB Cables


5. Lenses That Power Up Your Phone's Camera


4. An Emergency Battery Charger


3. a 3G or 4G Hotspot


2. A Power Splitter to Charge Everything at Once


1. The Grid-It Organizer





Read why you should have all this crap:

Top 10 Gadgets You Should Have In Your Go Bag




 

Praxius

Mass'Debater
Dec 18, 2007
10,677
161
63
Halifax, NS & Melbourne, VIC
Funny, while I spend most days working and playing in front of a computer, my "Kit" I carry around with me consists of the following:

• Keys
• Wallet
• Lighter
• Smokes
• Measuring Tape
• Magnifying Glass
• Keychain Flashlight
• Keychain USB Stick

And I used to have a utility knife, but left all my blades back in Canada until I figure out this Aussie Permit crap for knives.

The only techy thing in that list is a USB stick, which is used not very often.
 

Praxius

Mass'Debater
Dec 18, 2007
10,677
161
63
Halifax, NS & Melbourne, VIC
Oh you have to tell me about that!!!

Well I had a little collection of knives over the years. An Indian khukuri, a Luftwaffe dagger, my grandfather's hunting knife, my father's combat knife, a knife my father got me while he was in Ecuador, a Highland Dirk and a few others I can't remember right now...... however in Australia, you need to have the proper papers & register any knives you own. I couldn't be bothered trying to deal with that stuff while moving from Canada and risk having to ask questions at the US border for why I have a bunch of knives in my suitcase, so I just left them back in Canada for now.

I'm still trying to understand why they have such a registry, as there's no issue with kitchen knives (which many of the ones I have in my home are larger than the ones I have back in Canada)
 

CDNBear

Custom Troll
Sep 24, 2006
43,839
207
63
Ontario
Well I had a little collection of knives over the years. An Indian khukuri, a Luftwaffe dagger, my grandfather's hunting knife, my father's combat knife, a knife my father got me while he was in Ecuador, a Highland Dirk and a few others I can't remember right now...... however in Australia, you need to have the proper papers & register any knives you own. I couldn't be bothered trying to deal with that stuff while moving from Canada and risk having to ask questions at the US border for why I have a bunch of knives in my suitcase, so I just left them back in Canada for now.
Nice collection.

I'm still trying to understand why they have such a registry, as there's no issue with kitchen knives (which many of the ones I have in my home are larger than the ones I have back in Canada)
Ya, the permit thing I wanted to hear more about.

Sounds funny.
 

Nuggler

kind and gentle
Feb 27, 2006
11,596
141
63
Backwater, Ontario.
8OJESUS H CHRIST............register knives???

What bullshlt!!

In my backpack I would have at least a good jacknife.

Not a collector, but over the years, just by happenstance there is in me knife drawer:

.........a jackknife my uncle gave me when I was 12
........my first filleting knife
........two hunting knives in a leather sheath..........one big one small...........cheap
.......several Moro high carbon in sheaths
........one homemade from a file
..........several woodcarving knives
..........one Buck lite folding
.........several nondescript jackknives.

Yep, I'm dangerous.

In my workshop there are:

Several and many ultrasharp carving chisels, some small, some big, some huge.
One carving axe............shaving sharp
Hewing adze.............very very sharp
Hatchets and axes, fellers and trimmers.............sharp as hell

One man buck saw
Two man swede saw
Both very sharp

ETC................MANY MORE

All the above could be used as weapons..................or tools...........as they were meant to be used.

Pity the country which makes one register the tools which helped it come out of the stone age.....................Which could mean the stone age is in the minds of men, not in the tools they use.




.........